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      Drought Stress Impacts on Plants and Different Approaches to Alleviate Its Adverse Effects

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          Abstract

          Drought stress, being the inevitable factor that exists in various environments without recognizing borders and no clear warning thereby hampering plant biomass production, quality, and energy. It is the key important environmental stress that occurs due to temperature dynamics, light intensity, and low rainfall. Despite this, its cumulative, not obvious impact and multidimensional nature severely affects the plant morphological, physiological, biochemical and molecular attributes with adverse impact on photosynthetic capacity. Coping with water scarcity, plants evolve various complex resistance and adaptation mechanisms including physiological and biochemical responses, which differ with species level. The sophisticated adaptation mechanisms and regularity network that improves the water stress tolerance and adaptation in plants are briefly discussed. Growth pattern and structural dynamics, reduction in transpiration loss through altering stomatal conductance and distribution, leaf rolling, root to shoot ratio dynamics, root length increment, accumulation of compatible solutes, enhancement in transpiration efficiency, osmotic and hormonal regulation, and delayed senescence are the strategies that are adopted by plants under water deficit. Approaches for drought stress alleviations are breeding strategies, molecular and genomics perspectives with special emphasis on the omics technology alteration i.e., metabolomics, proteomics, genomics, transcriptomics, glyomics and phenomics that improve the stress tolerance in plants. For drought stress induction, seed priming, growth hormones, osmoprotectants, silicon (Si), selenium (Se) and potassium application are worth using under drought stress conditions in plants. In addition, drought adaptation through microbes, hydrogel, nanoparticles applications and metabolic engineering techniques that regulate the antioxidant enzymes activity for adaptation to drought stress in plants, enhancing plant tolerance through maintenance in cell homeostasis and ameliorates the adverse effects of water stress are of great potential in agriculture.

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          Most cited references255

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          Roles of glycine betaine and proline in improving plant abiotic stress resistance

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            Elucidating the molecular mechanisms mediating plant salt-stress responses.

            Contents Summary 523 I. Introduction 523 II. Sensing salt stress 524 III. Ion homeostasis regulation 524 IV. Metabolite and cell activity responses to salt stress 527 V. Conclusions and perspectives 532 Acknowledgements 533 References 533 SUMMARY: Excess soluble salts in soil (saline soils) are harmful to most plants. Salt imposes osmotic, ionic, and secondary stresses on plants. Over the past two decades, many determinants of salt tolerance and their regulatory mechanisms have been identified and characterized using molecular genetics and genomics approaches. This review describes recent progress in deciphering the mechanisms controlling ion homeostasis, cell activity responses, and epigenetic regulation in plants under salt stress. Finally, we highlight research areas that require further research to reveal new determinants of salt tolerance in plants.
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              A silicon transporter in rice.

              Silicon is beneficial to plant growth and helps plants to overcome abiotic and biotic stresses by preventing lodging (falling over) and increasing resistance to pests and diseases, as well as other stresses. Silicon is essential for high and sustainable production of rice, but the molecular mechanism responsible for the uptake of silicon is unknown. Here we describe the Low silicon rice 1 (Lsi1) gene, which controls silicon accumulation in rice, a typical silicon-accumulating plant. This gene belongs to the aquaporin family and is constitutively expressed in the roots. Lsi1 is localized on the plasma membrane of the distal side of both exodermis and endodermis cells, where casparian strips are located. Suppression of Lsi1 expression resulted in reduced silicon uptake. Furthermore, expression of Lsi1 in Xenopus oocytes showed transport activity for silicon only. The identification of a silicon transporter provides both an insight into the silicon uptake system in plants, and a new strategy for producing crops with high resistance to multiple stresses by genetic modification of the root's silicon uptake capacity.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: Academic Editor
                Journal
                Plants (Basel)
                Plants (Basel)
                plants
                Plants
                MDPI
                2223-7747
                28 January 2021
                February 2021
                : 10
                : 2
                : 259
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Plant Production Department, College of Food and Agriculture Sciences, King Saud University, P.O. Box 2460, Riyadh 11451, Saudi Arabia; nsuhaib@ 123456ksu.edu.sa (N.A.-S.); malotaibia@ 123456ksu.edu.sa (M.A.); refay@ 123456ksu.edu.sa (Y.R.); 438106@ 123456ksu.edu.sa (H.H.A.-W.)
                [2 ]Department of Crop Sciences, Faculty of Agriculture, Menoufia University, Shibin El-Kom 32514, Egypt
                [3 ]Department of Agronomy, University of Agriculture Peshawar, Peshawar 25130, Pakistan; nawab@ 123456aup.edu.pk (N.A.); akmal@ 123456aup.edu.pk (M.A.)
                [4 ]Livestock research and development station, Surezai Peshawar, Peshawar 25000, Pakistan
                [5 ]Department of Forest Engineering, Faculty of Forestry, Kahramanmaras Sutcu Imam University, Kahramanmaras 46100, Turkey; turgaydindaroglu@ 123456ksu.edu.tr
                [6 ]Department of Animal Sciences, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14850, USA
                Author notes
                [* ]Correspondence: mseleiman@ 123456ksu.edu.sa (M.F.S.); mlb487@ 123456cornell.edu (M.L.B.); Tel.: +966-553-153-351 (M.F.S.)
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4779-9414
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7557-0222
                https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5999-3367
                Article
                plants-10-00259
                10.3390/plants10020259
                7911879
                33525688
                9ec54184-e081-4600-a564-31b6d0318118
                © 2021 by the authors.

                Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 30 December 2020
                : 18 January 2021
                Categories
                Review

                drought stress,plants,mitigation,abiotic stress
                drought stress, plants, mitigation, abiotic stress

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